Hotel Alcoba del Rey de Sevilla - Boutique Hotel
Hotel Alcoba del Rey de Sevilla is beside the Basilica which keeps the universal Saint Mary of Macarena, Hotel Alcoba del Rey de Sevilla is placed in a small palace where, according to the legend, the king poet of Seville would hide from his father his love to the laundress Rumaykiyya.
Guests can not really imagine what they are going to find inside when looking at its sober but elegant façade. An explosion of colours, the tinkling water when falling in the Hotel Alcoba del Rey de Sevilla fountain, and exuberant scents take you back to the Seville of Al-Andalus, to the magnificent kingdom of Taifas of Al-Mutamid, who made Isbiliyya (Seville) the most important city of the ancient world.
The architectural structure of Hotel Alcoba del Rey de Sevilla is based on handmade materials used in Seville 8 centuries ago, consists on a central andalousian patio, surrounded by different chambers: the reception, breakfast lounge, cafeteria, the spiral staircase, and the 15 rooms, each one different and unique, decorated in different colours and furniture, and giving special relevance to the bathrooms, whose walls are stuccoed and their baths made with marble. They have king size beds with canopy, carved headboards, doors with horseshoe archs, silk and cotton clothes, the scent of the furniture made on cedar, handmade basins made on polished brass and victorian taps brought from India. Hotel Alcoba del Rey de Sevilla rooms have their own history because instead of having numbers, they have the names of significant figures from Al-Andalus, who were born, lived or developed their best works in Seville.
The decoration of Hotel Alcoba del Rey de Sevilla, the water from the fountain, the scents and the flavour of our moorish tapas introduce our hosts in a climate of relax and pleasure that counteracts the stress caused by the city.
And, a surprise: the guests can buy everything they can see in the hotel. Even the beds, taps and floors can be purchased so guests can take home a beautiful tiny part of Al-Andalus.
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